Ultrastar 1
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I was doing research on faster than light travel and a question popped into my head: what would be the side effects of faster than light speed travel? Any ideas?
The discussion centers on the hypothetical side effects and implications of faster than light (FTL) travel, exploring theoretical frameworks, potential paradoxes, and the nature of time and causality. Participants engage with concepts from both special and general relativity, as well as speculative ideas related to tachyons and the Alcubierre metric.
Participants express a range of views on the feasibility and implications of FTL travel, with no consensus reached. Some agree on the speculative nature of the topic, while others present competing theories and interpretations of relativity and its implications for time travel.
Limitations include the speculative nature of FTL travel, the dependence on theoretical constructs that may not be empirically validated, and the unresolved mathematical complexities surrounding general relativity and time travel scenarios.
This discussion may be of interest to those exploring theoretical physics, particularly in the realms of relativity, time travel, and speculative models of the universe.
anvesh111 said:...but u know something about LHC(large hadron collider) which is an accelerator which makes the protons to travel ,speed of light
Rubix said:well I've thought about this. If you turned around while traveling the speed of light and stayed stationary relative to yourself, you would see nothing, because there would be no photons entering your eyeball. And if you moved your head slightly forward while facing backwards you would see a picture, and it would go away when you stopped moving your head forward.
Integral said:Use your imagination, write a novel if you wish since physics has no answer to that question. All physics can say is that is impossible for a body with mass to reach or exceed the speed of light.
Lsos said:It's like asking "what would happen if things fell up, instead of down?" It's kind of a meaningless question because that's just not how the world works...
Wallace said:This metric still violates the laws of physics, because in order to make space-time warp in the ways demanded by the metric, you need exotic energy sources which violate known laws of physics. None the less, it still provides a self-consistent GR description of FTL. Playing around with the paths of light rays in that space-time would answer some of the questions posed in the OP. It's still science fiction, but has a modicum of credibility and some plausibility.
Wallace said:The Alcubierre metric isn't *that* complex, and isn't too complicated to analyse, although I guess that statement is a relative one, depending on ones mathematical training.
twofish-quant said:Also there are ways to avoid the causality problem. One is to require that you need to make one trip at slower than the speed of light. Another is to say that in order to travel FTL, you need enormous energies